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Thursday, November 13, 2025 |
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| Exhibition unites Marina Perez Simão and Tomie Ohtake in a cross-generational dialogue on abstraction |
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Tomie Ohtake, Untitled, 1983 Oil on canvas, 59-1/8" × 59-1/8" (150.2 cm × 150.2 cm) 59-1/4" × 59-1/4" × 1-1/2" (150.5 cm × 150.5 cm × 3.8 cm), frame.
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TOKYO.- Pace is presenting coinciding exhibitions of work by artists Marina Perez Simão and Tomie Ohtake in Tokyo this fall. On view November 4, 2025, through February 11, 2026, these presentations, installed across the first and second floors of Paces Azabudai Hills gallery, situate new paintings by Simão in dialogue with works produced by Ohtakea Japanese-Brazilian artist whose inventive abstractions charted new courses for Modernism in Brazilbetween 1963 and 2013.
For her debut solo exhibition in Japan, Simãoa Brazilian artist renowned for her work in oil painting, watercolor, and printmakingunveiled a new series of landscape-inspired pieces. Her vibrant, lyrical compositions blur the lines between interior and exterior worlds, guiding viewers through semi-abstract realms filled with organic, flowing forms. Her work reflects a deep engagement with emotion, memory, and place, rendered through a distinctly personal visual language. As part of her process, Simão begins with drawing and watercolor, forging her compositions on canvas after her initial iterations of ideas and forms in these other mediums.
The paintings that Simão is showing at Pace Tokyo speak to her deep and enduring interest in abstractions power to convey ideas, concepts, and feelings that transcend language. With these canvases created in 2024 and 2025, the artist has experimented with vertical and horizontal formats to propose new ways of reading space. Defying conventions of landscape painting, she often incorporates multiple horizons in her otherworldly, atmospheric compositions.
Simãos new works are chromatically linked by her use of indigoan ode to the centuries-old tradition of indigo production in Japanas well as shades of red and pink. Always unfolding her practice in different directions with each body of work, she has also imbued these dynamic paintings, through palette and gesture, with cosmic luminosity and rhythmic motion. Rendered at multiple scales, Simãos latest compositions are rife with mystery, and they propose new ways of viewing and experiencing landscape.
Together, these exhibitions of work by Simão and Ohtake present an intergenerational conversation between two artists linked by their heritage and their imaginative approaches to abstraction and landscape painting.
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